Update on Philosophy Compass
July 9th, 2008
Good afternoon, all!
This morning, I was asked a question about accessing Philosophy Compass, formerly published by Blackwell, but now part of Wiley-Interscience.
If you are at Harvard, all you will need is your PIN and ID to access the Philosophy Compass. If you search “philosophy compass” in HOLLIS, setting the search parameters to “title,” you’ll turn up the record, which lists the URL for the database.
However, you will not be able to access the articles at the present time. As former Blackwell content, the Philosophy Compass is part of the migration of that content over to the Wiley-Interscience platform that began about two weeks ago. Unfortunately, the migration of the content did not go as smoothly as planned, and there are a number of items that are currently unavailable, the Philosophy Compass being one of them.
I do not know when this will be available again. Wiley is moving as quickly as possible to migrate the content and make it available — no small feat when over 1.6 million articles are involved. I will keep checking back to see if the Philosophy Compass is available, and will let you know. I will also let you know about some of the features of the new platform.
Please don’t hesitate to let me know if you have any questions about this.
Update 14 July 2008: Access to Philosophy Compass has been restored. You are now able to download articles without being charged.
Journal of Potential Interest: Mind and Matter
July 9th, 2008
Good morning, readers!
Yesterday, I learned of a journal that may be of interest to those who study philosophy of mind, epistemology, cognitive science, and related fields: Mind and Matter. Here is a description of the journal:
Mind and Matter is aimed at an educated interdisciplinary readership interested in all aspects of mind-matter research from the perspectives of the sciences and humanities. It is devoted to the publication of empirical, theoretical, and conceptual research and the discussion of its results. The main subject areas of the journal are:
– neuroscience, cognitive science, behavioral science
– physical approaches, mathematical modeling, data analysis
– philosophy of science, philosophy of mind, applied metaphysics
– cultural and social studies, history of ideas
Some, but not all, of the articles are available for free on the site. One of these is “The Phenomenological Role of Consciousness in Measurement,” by Patrick A. Heelan, Mind and Matter 2(1) 2004, which a friend and colleague sent to me yesterday. The abstract reads:
A structural analogy is pointed out between a hermeneutically developed phenomenological description, based on Husserl, of the process of perceptual cognition on the one hand and quantum mechanical measurement on the other hand. In Husserl’s analytic phase of the cognition process, the “intentionality-structure” of the subject/object union prior to predication of a local object is an entangled symmetry-making state, and this entanglement is broken in the synthetic phase when the particular local object is constituted under the influence of an eidos (”inner horizon”) and the “facticity” of the local world (”outer horizon”). Replacing “perceptual cognition” by “measurement” and “subject” by “expert subject using a measuring device” the analogy of a formal quantum structure is extended to the conscious structure of all empirical cognition. This is laid out in three theses: about perception, about classical measurement, and about quantum measurement. The results point to the need for research into the quantum structure of the physical embodiment of human cognition.
Harvard does not currently have electronic access to the full contents of the journal, though a hard copy may be found in Widener, Widener WID-LC RC321 .M49, with current issues in the Reading Room Stacks.
What do you think, readers?